After the inflation spike, analysts warn of stagflation in the offing
Jan 14, 2020, 08:38 IST
Spike in headline inflation is an "unwanted complication" in a slowing economy and will prevent the Reserve Bank from cutting rates, analysts said on Monday, warning of the "spectre of stagflation" that India risks getting into. Official data released showed the consumer price inflation fastened to 7.35 per cent in December, driven largely by a massive increase in vegetable prices.
"A closer look shows the current spike in inflation comes from transitory or idiosyncratic factors. Let's call them 'noise'. Does that mean the RBI can pass over the noise as just noise? No," analysts at rating agency Crisil said.
"Along with slowing growth, more-than-desirable inflation raises the sceptre of stagflation," they warned.
A 'stagflation' is an undesirable phenomenon which has persistently high inflation with high unemployment and a stagnancy in demand.
It can be noted that under the medium term target it signed with the government, the RBI is mandated to keep the inflation at 4 per cent with a flexibility to have a 2 percentage point relaxation on either side.
The central bank had surprised watchers by keeping rates unchanged contrary to expectation of a cut to boost the sagging economic growth, which slid to an over five-year low of 4.5 per cent for the September quarter.
Rating agency Icra said it expects the number to correct sharply in January but the RBI's rate setting Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) will pause over next few of its bi-monthly review meets.
Private sector lender Yes Bank's house economists said they do not expect a cut until the last quarter of 2020.
The analysts at Crisil explained that food is the noisemaker at present and if one were to exclude vegetables and pulses which have resulted in the spike, food inflation comes at 5 per cent which is still at a 33-month high.
The core inflation, which is price rise excluding food and fuel, also runs the risk of getting impacted because of the rise in telecom prices, it said.
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"A closer look shows the current spike in inflation comes from transitory or idiosyncratic factors. Let's call them 'noise'. Does that mean the RBI can pass over the noise as just noise? No," analysts at rating agency Crisil said.
"Along with slowing growth, more-than-desirable inflation raises the sceptre of stagflation," they warned.
A 'stagflation' is an undesirable phenomenon which has persistently high inflation with high unemployment and a stagnancy in demand.
It can be noted that under the medium term target it signed with the government, the RBI is mandated to keep the inflation at 4 per cent with a flexibility to have a 2 percentage point relaxation on either side.
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Rating agency Icra said it expects the number to correct sharply in January but the RBI's rate setting Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) will pause over next few of its bi-monthly review meets.
Private sector lender Yes Bank's house economists said they do not expect a cut until the last quarter of 2020.
The analysts at Crisil explained that food is the noisemaker at present and if one were to exclude vegetables and pulses which have resulted in the spike, food inflation comes at 5 per cent which is still at a 33-month high.
The core inflation, which is price rise excluding food and fuel, also runs the risk of getting impacted because of the rise in telecom prices, it said.
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Care Ratings also flagged the high fiscal deficit, which induces inflation, is also a concern. It can be noted that there are calls for looking over the fiscal deficit concerns to push up the growth process ahead of the Union budget scheduled for February 1. See also: